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Charles Camsell

Charles Camsell
Born (1876-02-08)February 8, 1876
Fort Liard, Northwest Territories
Died December 19, 1958(1958-12-19) (aged 82)
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Nationality Canadian
Education BA
post graduate work at Queens, Harvard and MIT
Honorary doctorate U of M (1936)
Alma mater St. John's College
University of Manitoba
Occupation Geologist
Known for Deputy minister of mines (1920–1935)
Commissioner of the Northwest Territories (1935–1946)
President of the Canadian Geographical Society (1929–1941)
Notable work Founded the Canadian Geographical Society in 1929

Charles Camsell (February 8, 1876 – December 19, 1958) was a Canadian geologist and Commissioner of the Northwest Territories from December 3, 1936 to December 3, 1946.

He was born in 1876 in Fort Liard, Northwest Territories, the son of a Hudson's Bay Company factor. In 1894, he earned a Bachelor of Arts in Natural Science at the University of Manitoba. Following graduation, he returned to the north where he and his brother caught gold rush fever and set out to stake a claim in the Yukon. It was at this time that he developed an interest in geology and exploration.

Camsell had a long and outstanding career with the Public Service of Canada commencing in 1904.

In June 1904, Charles received a letter from the head of the GSC, appointing him to a job he had not even applied for. He spent the early part of his career on various geological expeditions that took him to some of the most remote locations in the North. He also did geological fieldwork in southern British Columbia, taking a detailed survey of the unique gold deposits of Nickel Plate Mountain.

In 1920, he was appointed Deputy Minister of Mines and, in 1936, Deputy Minister of Mines and Resources.

He retired from the Public Service of Canada in 1946 at the age of 70.

From 1930 to 1931 Camsell was President of the Royal Society of Canada. The Royal Society of Canada is the senior national body of distinguished Canadian scientists and scholars. Its primary objective is to promote learning and research in the natural and social sciences and in the humanities.


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